Duncan, British Columbia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| City of Duncan | |
| City Hall | |
| Motto: City of Totems | |
| Location of Duncan in British Columbia | |
| Coordinates: | |
|---|---|
| Country | |
| Province | |
| Region | Vancouver Island |
| Regional district | Cowichan Valley |
| Incorporated | 1912 |
| Government | |
| - Governing body | Duncan City Council |
| - Mayor | Phil Kent |
| Area | |
| - Total | 2.05 km² (0.8 sq mi) |
| Elevation | 20 m (66 ft) |
| Population (2006) | |
| - Total | 4,986 |
| Time zone | PST (UTC-8) |
| Highways | 1 |
| Waterways | Cowichan River |
| Website: City of Duncan | |
Duncan (pop. 4,986) is a city on southern Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada.
Contents |
[edit] History
The community is named after William Chalmers Duncan, born 1836 in Sarnia, Ontario. He arrived in Victoria in May 1862, then in August of that year was one of the party of a hundred settlers which Governor Douglas took to Cowichan Bay. After going off on several gold rushes, Duncan settled close to the present city of Duncan. He married in 1876, and his son Kenneth became the first mayor of Duncan. A street bears his name today.
Duncan's farm was named Alderlea, and this was the first name of the adjacent settlement. In August of 1886, the Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway was opened. No stop had been scheduled at Alderlea for the inaugural train bearing Sir John A. Macdonald and Robert Dunsmuir. However, at Duncan's Crossing, the level crossing nearest Alderlea, a crowd of 2,000 had assembled around a decorated arch and the train came to an unplanned halt, quite literally putting it on the map.
In the early 1900s, Duncan's Chinatown was the social centre for the Cowichan Valley's Chinese population. Chinatown was concentrated in a single block in the southwestern corner of Duncan. At its largest point, Duncan's Chinatown included six Chinese families and 30 merchants supplying loggers, millworkers and cannery and mine workers. As immigration laws became more restrictive, businesses closed and the buildings became run down. The city tore the buildings down in 1969 to build a new law courts complex. Some materials from the original buildings was used at Whippletree Junction.[1]
In the 1980s, Duncan was linked to the 1985 bombings at Narita Airport in Japan and aboard Air India Flight 182, Canada's largest murder case. Resident Inderjit Singh Reyat purchased bomb parts and a radio used to conceal a bomb at Duncan stores. Less than two weeks prior to the bombings, Reyat and suspected Air India mastermind Talwinder Singh Parmar were observed testing explosives in the woods outside of Duncan by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS).[2]
[edit] Location
The railroad continues to cross Duncan as does the Trans-Canada Highway. The city is about 50 kilometres from both Victoria to the south and Nanaimo to the north. Although the City of Duncan has a population of less than 5000 it serves the Cowichan Valley, which has a population of approximately 78000. Duncan is the seat of the Cowichan Valley Regional District. It derives the name from Quw’utsun’ > Khowutzun > Cowichan, literally translated from Coast Salish into "The Warm Land". Duncan records the highest average mean temperature in Canada at 11C.
[edit] Tourist Attractions
Duncan's tourism slogan is "The City of Totems". The city has many totem poles around the downtown area, which were erected in the late 1980s, including the world's largest totem pole (in diameter), carved by First Nations artisan Simon Charlie.
Duncan has a large First Nations community, and is the traditional home of the Coast Salish Natives, who are the largest band in the Coast Salish tribe. The Salish are makers of the world famous Cowichan Sweaters.
Duncan boasts one of the largest Farmers' Markets on Vancouver Island. Held just south of town at Sun Valley Mall every Saturday from 9:00 - 2:00, the Market offers local produce, nursery products, and crafts.
Duncan is home to the BC Forest Discovery Centre. Before the U.S.-Canada softwood lumber dispute, Duncan and the whole Cowichan Valley were a thriving lumber centre in British Columbia.
Duncan has the world's largest ice hockey stick, which is on display on the side of the local arena (Cowichan Community Centre).[3] The stick was made specifically for Expo 86 in Vancouver.
[edit] Education
Malaspina University-College has a small campus in Duncan that offers programs and courses in university transfer, access, trades and applied technology, health and human services, and career and academic preparation. The campus also has a Continuing Education department that offers certificate programs, personal and professional development courses, and online courses.
Duncan has one public secondary school, Cowichan Secondary School, as well as several elementary and middle schools. It also has one private secondary university preparatory school, Queen Margaret's School for girls, established in 1921 which has a co-ed junior school included. There is also an independent Catholic school, Queen of Angels which continues up to Grade 9. The head offices for School District 79 Cowichan Valley are also located in Duncan.
[edit] Sports
Duncan is the home city of the British Columbia Hockey League's Cowichan Valley Capitals, who play in the Cowichan Community Centre.
[edit] Gallery
[edit] References
- ^ From Camp to Community - Where They Came From - China
- ^ Sikh probe took wrong turn after Duncan blast: former CSIS agent, CBC News, May 24, 2007
- ^ World's Largest Hockey Stick & Puck, Tourism Vancouver, Retrieved July 3, 2007
[edit] External links
- Duncan in the BC Geographical Names Information System
- City of Duncan
- Duncan Downtown official website
- Imagine the Cowichan, part of Simon Fraser University's Imagine BC series
| North Cowichan completely surrounds Halalt |
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| Cowichan Valley E | Squaw-hay-one, Tsussie 6, Capital F | ||||||
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